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About Jeffrey P. Snider

Give us a call at 1-888-777-0970 or via email at info@alhambrapartners.com to discuss how his unique approach informs our investment decisions. We'd be happy to discuss our investment strategies and provide a complimentary portfolio review.

OECD Gets Brazil Really Wrong; Common Factors With Far More Than Brazil

By |2016-02-22T18:29:02-05:00February 22nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I wrote last week about the OECD’s sudden alarm over global growth “flatlining” but I think it important and relevant to further emphasize why. If you go back only to June last year, their economic outlook for the world sounds distinctly familiar. The OECD has cut its global economic growth forecast for this year but says it expects lower oil [...]

Way Beyond Reasonable Belief

By |2016-02-22T17:25:27-05:00February 22nd, 2016|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It has become cliché that commentary continues toward the increasingly absurd at the expense of the obvious and all because Janet Yellen says there can’t possibly be anything wrong. The degree to which the broader markets agree in that sense has certainly lessened of late, but that only suggests the increasingly bizarre platitudes offered to do anything other than confirm [...]

Widespread and Worse

By |2016-02-19T17:24:48-05:00February 19th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When Janet Yellen testified to Congress last week, she was as usual careful with her words. Alan Greenspan once called it “mumbling with incoherence” but there is very little left to rambling in Yellen’s predicament. Where Greenspan was once the “maestro” and Bernanke the “hero” Yellen is stuck holding the bag, and I think she knows it. In truth, there [...]

Orthodox Downgrades Traced to Mid-2015’s ‘Dollar’ Intensification

By |2016-02-19T12:41:00-05:00February 19th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If the US consumers and attendant “demand” had been relatively weak entering 2015 producing even at that point questionable conditions that are now admitted as a manufacturing recession, it is increasingly clear that “something” changed around the middle of the year. Obviously, market turmoil that had been largely focused overseas suddenly swung internally to capture US markets once though invulnerable, [...]

China and US, Producer Prices Very Much Agree

By |2016-02-18T18:27:31-05:00February 18th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PPI estimate for China was not a fifth straight -5.9%, instead the estimate for January 2016 was -5.3%; not appreciably different but at least not blatantly sticking with a single number. China’s CPI remained below 2% at just 1.8% in January, showing that as far as calculated “inflation” none of the PBOC’s massive efforts since November last year have [...]

NIRP Has Already Been Proven

By |2016-02-18T17:25:39-05:00February 18th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The orthodox intention behind NIRP is that by taxing idle “money” it will make banks put it to use. Setting aside relevant objections about what bank “reserves” actually are, negative nominal rates used in this fashion just don’t work that way. This is not an arguable point; it has been proven across 618 days or just shy of 21 months. [...]

Complicated And Often Tortured Plumbing Behind ‘Selling UST’

By |2016-02-17T19:17:06-05:00February 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While the eurodollar system has attained the full functions of a banking system in parallel to (and in many ways superseding) the onshore dollar version, at its core remains its primary purpose as a means to solve global payments. It is the idea of the dollar replacing gold and sterling, the reserve currency. The difference in recognizing the eurodollar as [...]

Industrial Production Is Leaving Little Doubt

By |2016-02-17T16:47:41-05:00February 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Industrial production fell 0.7% in January 2016 which was slightly better than the (revised) -1.9% estimated for December. It was, however, the third consecutive month showing a decline and, more importantly, the 6-month average turned negative for the first time in the “cycle.” Industrial production, at least as far as the Federal Reserve’s estimated series for it, is actually a [...]

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